Systems and method for delivering reliable datagram service through connection-oriented service

ABSTRACT

A system and method for reliable delivery of datagram protocol data unit (PDU) packets generated by a network oriented application at a first computing network element to a second computing network element across a network. The method steps include: at the first computing network element, capturing generated datagram packets destined for the second computing network element; determining a size of a payload associated with the datagram and communicating the size of the payload to the second computing element via a reliable connection-oriented transport service PDU; communicating the actual payload to the second computing element via the reliable connection-oriented transport service PDU; and, at the second computing network element, utilizing payload size and payload to reconstruct a datagram PDU including the payload for a network application at the second computing network element. By this technique, reliable datagram PDU transport over the network is ensured.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/383,896 filed on Aug. 26, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,633,587 entitled “System and Method for Delivering Reliable Datagram Service Through Connection-Oriented Service”, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to packet communications across networks, and particularly, to an improved connection-oriented communications system for providing reliable datagram packet-based communications.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Currently, a datagram-based communications protocol known as the Simple Network Management Protocol (“SNMP”), is implemented to perform, network management of vendor telecommunications equipment over long distances across local area networks (LANs) and wide area networks (WANs). For example, in the system 10 as shown in FIG. 1, many vendors 12 of a telecommunications carrier 15 (e.g., MCIWorldcom) rely on SNMP communications to manage their equipment across a LAN/WAN 20. Thus, a piece of equipment 13 may generate a message about its operational state and this message may be communicated via SNMP from the equipment to MCIWorldcom's network management software 16 across the network. In another example implementation, a network operation, administrator or maintenance center, e.g., located in North Carolina, may be required to provision switches remotely located across the country, e.g., in Texas, via a WAN.

It is the case that the Simple Network Management Protocol is an unreliable protocol, based on the Internet Protocol Suite's Uniform Datagram Packet (“UDP”) protocol. An unreliable protocol is one that does not guarantee delivery of information to its network destination, and thus requires retransmission of datagrams with error management being pushed up into the application layer. Thus, in the above-described example, datagrams traveling between North Carolina and Texas via SNMP may be routine dropped in the WAN 20, possibly causing provisioning activity to fail. Obviously, the loss of provisioning packet information for these switches may be detrimental to the carrier's business.

When a network is in trouble, e.g., when a large percentage (80% or more) of all network communications are failing, it is very difficult to actually communicate with a device. Even if SNMP were TCP based, it would be very difficult to communicate with a device under these conditions. This is because TCP requires a number of contiguous packets to be sent and received to open a TCP session, and if many of the packets are lost, TCP would fail. However, with UDP PDUs, no setup packets are required, and advantageously, single SNMP commands can fit within a single datagram. So, if a network is in trouble, datagrams can be machine gunned at a host, and even if 90% of all packets are being lost, eventually, the SNMP command will be delivered to the device. Network Management is needed most when the network is in trouble, and this is why the datagram-based SNMP protocol is used.

Furthermore, the problem with SNMP being an unreliable protocol is that it does not support the notion of a transaction well. A transaction is a sequence of datagrams being exchanged between a manager and agent to accomplish a task. The SNMP works fine when a management task requires only one or two datagrams. However, if a management task requires a complex set of datagrams being exchanged, then an unreliable protocol does not work well, because any datagram element within the transaction can be lost in the network. A real life example of this problem is provisioning data services for telecommunications carrier customers were setting up high speed data services requires complex SNMP based transactions.

No mechanism or technique is currently available to remedy these problems. Consequently, it would be highly desirable to implement a mechanism that would virtually eliminate the loss of datagram packets transmitted over a LAN/WAN.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention satisfies the above mentioned need by providing a reliable connection-oriented communications to/from a management system and vendor equipment, which have datagram based communications.

Particularly, the method and system for delivering reliable datagram service comprises the following components: a device for capturing datagrams intended to traverse the LAN/WAN; a device for extracting datagram payloads from captured datagrams, with the payloads being typically application level PDUs; a device for sending datagram payloads through LAN/WAN, by use of a reliable connection-oriented protocol, e.g., TCP/IP; and, after payload has been sent across LAN/WA, a device for reconstructing the payload as a datagram and sending the reconstructed datagram to the intended local recipient.

Preferably, this technology may be implemented at the OS level in the kernel, or it may be implemented as an application level process. As the mechanism of the invention allows for non-intrusive hardening of existing datagram based communications, existing communications software does not have to be recompiled to use this technology, thus facilitating addition of this technology to existing systems.

Advantageously, this technology makes datagram communications reliable; therefore, it can benefit many different commercial applications.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following, more particular description of a preferred embodiment of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements.

FIG. 1 illustrates a typical communications system providing datagram packet communications over a LAN/WAN between a vendor and a network manager;

FIG. 2 a high level block diagram of the application level implementation for providing reliable datagram service according to the invention;

FIG. 3 is a detailed illustration of the mechanism 200 for providing reliable datagram service through a connection-oriented service according to the preferred embodiment of the invention;

FIG. 4 illustrates an application level process for reliably delivering datagrams through a connection-oriented service;

FIG. 5 illustrates the Tcp2Udp initialization process;

FIG. 6 is a flow chart depicting the child process for performing the actual work of moving datagram payloads through the LAN/WAN; and,

FIG. 7 depicts the functionality of the present invention added to an operating system the form of a device driver.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

FIG. 2 depicts a high level block diagram of the application level implementation or providing reliable datagram service according to the invention. It is understood that the present invention may be implemented at the operating system kernel level, as well. As shown in FIG. 2, conceptually there is an application process 40, and an application level process 60 for handling datagrams destined for LAN/WAN via TCP/IP, X.25, or any other transport protocol 80, for example. With an application process implementation, an application's peer host IP address is to be changed to the local host's IP address on permit the “application level process” that handles datagrams to catch datagrams headed for the LAN/WAN, as will be described in greater detail herein.

FIG. 3 is a detailed illustration of the mechanism 200 for providing reliable datagram service through a connection-oriented service according to the preferred embodiment of the invention. As shown in FIG. 3 there is provided a device 230, e.g., an SNM Provisioning Server (PS) device which includes a network oriented application software 240 for generating application level datagram protocol datagram units (“PDU”) packets. The generated PDU datagram packets are input to a reliable datagram service mechanism 250 a which functions to strip the payload out of each datagram PDU. As an example described herein, such payload may comprise switch provisioning data information. The reliable datagram service mechanism 250 a then communicates the size of the payload to be sent to a peer computing element 235 setup as a server process, which may comprise a switch device 235, e.g., an Ascend Frame/ATM switch platform (proprietary to Lucent Technology Inc.), which contains the network oriented application 245, via the LAN/WAN 20. For the given example described herein, the network oriented application 245 may include software for provisioning the network switches. It is understood however, that any application receiving a PDU datagram payload may be provided. Subsequently, the actual payload (application level PDU) is sent to the provisioning server or peer computing element 235. Specifically, as further shown in FIG. 3, a counterpart reliable datagram service mechanism 250 b provided at the server 235, receives the payload size and the actual payload communicated. Then, the counterpart reliable datagram service mechanism 250 b reconstructs the datagram and sends the reconstructed datagram to the local network oriented application 245, for which the information was targeted.

The application level process described above for reliable delivering datagrams through a connection-oriented service is now described by way of example, as shown in FIG. 4. In this example, UDP PDU payloads are delivered over LAN/WAN 20 using the more reliable TCP/IP transport protocol, however, it is understood that any reliable transport level protocol may be implemented. As shown in FIG. 4, two processes: “udp2tcp” 255 a and “tcp2udp” 255 b correspond to MDRDS process 250 a, 250 b, respectively, as described above, with the tcp2udp 255 b executable running on the server device 235, e.g., the Frame/ATM switch platform, and, the udp2tcp 255 a executable running on the client device 230, e.g., the SNM Provisioning Server (PS) device.

On the client device 230, the SNM provisioning client is configured to talk to the locally implemented udp2tcp program enabling the client to believe that the udp2tcp program 255 a is the switch device 235. Thus, when the client device communicates, it sends its UDP PDUs to the udp2tcp process 255 a. The Udp2tcp process 255 a, takes the payload data from UDP and sends it to the provisioning network application, e.g., over TCP, to the server process 235 where it is received by the tcp2udp executable 255 b. As mentioned by way of example herein, the contents of the UDP packet, i.e., the payload information, is another PDU encapsulated by the UDP envelope. This may be a SNMP PDU or possibly a PDU proprietary to the client.

The tcp2udp 255 b executable implemented in the server receives the UDP payload data and resends the information as a UDP PDU to the switch device 235. Thus, the switch platform 235 believes the local tcp2udp executable 255 b is the remote network management (SNM) client.

The “udp2tcp” 255 a and “tcp2udp” 255 b processes are now described herein with greater particularity.

As described, the tcp2udp application process lives on the switch's platform, and is setup as a server process which process is invoked with the following parameters: a) a TCP Port Number for the TCP port that is used for communications over the LAN/WIN between udp2tcp and tcp2udp; b) a UDP Port Number for the UDP port which is the number used by the network-oriented application; and, c) an IP Address which is the IP address of the host running the network-oriented application. This typically will be the local host's address.

FIG. 5 illustrates the Tcp2Udp initialization process 100. Skilled artisans would be able to devise a similar initialization process for the Udp2Tcp executable in FIG. 5, as indicated at a first step 103 a TCP/IP socket is opened, using a predefined TCP port number, so that any client on any host may connect to the process via LAN/WAN communications. This port is made ready to except connection requests made by udp2tcp processes located on peer hosts. At step 105, call receipt process threads are initialized for accepting connection requests from Udp2tcp processes. These process threads include: 1) a process that listens for client process connections (“t_listen”), and, 2) a process for accepting, calls from the client process (“t_accept”). The next few steps are implemented to prepare for the receipt of datagrams from applications running on the client machine. Specifically, as indicated at step 107, a UDP socket is initialized using the network-oriented application's part number as follows: it opens a UDP endpoint; initializes the socket with address of the server to send datagrams; and it initializes a UDP unit data structure for sending/receiving information via UDP. Thus, a socket (software connection) is opened to enable reading and writing of UDP datagram within the server device.

After initialization is completed, the process goes into a loop, as indicated at steps 101-115, to wait for connection requests from udp2tcp, located on remote peer hosts. Particularly, as indicated at step 110, the process waits for receipt of a connection request from Udp2tcp using t_listen. A received call from the client process is accepted using t_accept function, as indicated at step 112. Next, as indicated at step 115, the tcp2udp process clones itself to generate a child tcp2udp process, so there are now two tcp2udp processes: the original process, the parent, which returns to the top of the loop to listen for more connections, and the clone (child) process, which enters a main loop 119 for sending and receiving message datagrams. It is understood that the child process is created utilizing the UNIX application utility fork(), for example, having the opened socket (step 103) for processing the received PDUs. After spawning the child process, described herein with respect to FIG. 6, the process then returns to step 110 so the parent may wait for further connection requests from a client process.

Specifically, the child tcp2udp process main processing loop 119 performs the actual work of moving datagram payloads through the LAN/WAN as now described in greater detail in view of FIG. 6. In the preferred embodiment, a multiplexed I/O scheme is implemented, whereby the loop watches for data to be read from either the TCP socket or from the UDP socket. Data available on the UDP socket are outgoing UDP datagrams traveling from an application on the local host across the LAN/WAN. Information available on the TCP socket is incoming application level PDUs, which have traveled across the LAN/WAN and are destined for an application on the local host.

Particularly, the Tcp2udp process is configured as a server process and may support multiple concurrent connections. That is, in the preferred embodiment, communications between the udp2tcp and tcp2udp processes is two way asynchronous multiplexed I/O, based on Select () (a UNIX application utility). Thus, as shown in FIG. 6, at step 120, a decision is first made as to whether the current data received is data from the udp2tcp process across the LAN/WAN via TCP, or, is data from the server application itself. If the data available is received from the udp2tcp process, then at step 130 the size of the PDU that is expected to be transmitted across the LAN/WAN via TCP (from the udp2tcp process) is read. Then, at step 135, the actual PDU data received via the TCP connection is read, and, at step 140, an application level UDP PDU packet is formed that comprises data read from the TCP/IP. Skilled artisans may easily generate the UDP PDU packets from the parameter information and from techniques described in the reference W. Richard Stevens, “UNIX Network Programming”, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1990 (ISBN 0-12-949876-1), the whole contents and disclosure of which is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. Finally, at step 145, the new application level UDP datagram is sent to the network-oriented application using the UDP socket. The process then proceeds back to step 120 for the next I/O select. It is understood that when the local server application receives the datagram, it will believe it has received information directly from its peer computing entity. It is unaware that udp2tcp and tcp2udp handled the information.

If, at step 120, data is received from the server application, i.e., information is available on the UDP socket, then, the process proceeds to step 150, where the UDP PDU (datagram) received from the Local network-oriented server application is read into tcp2udp. Then, at step 155, the size of the PDU data (payload) received via the UDP is obtained, and, at step 160, the PDU data size is sent to the udp2Tcp process via the TCP connection. This allows the receiver (e.g., client) to know in advance the size of the information to be transmitted over TCP. It is understood that the size of the PDU must be successfully sent before the actual PDU can be transmitted because TCP is a reliable, stream oriented protocol. Finally, at step 165, the actual payload (PDU data) is sent to the udp2Tcp process via TCP/IP.

According to the invention, the Udp2Tcp process is virtually identical to the Tcp2Udp process describes herein. That is, both Udp2Tcp and Tcp2Udp processes mirror each other as both are equipped to receive and send datagram packets via a connection-oriented protocol, e.g., TCP/IP, once a virtual connection over a network is established. Thus, the UDP2TCP application process lives on the network management platform, and is setup as a server process which process is invoked with the following parameters: a) a TCP Port Number for the TCP port that is used for communications over fine LAN/WAN between udp2tcp and tcp2udp; b) a UDP Port Number for the UDP port which is the number used by the network-oriented application; and, c) an IP Address which is the IP address of the host running the network-oriented application. The Udp2Tcp initialization process is similar to the above-described initialization process relating to the Tcp2Udp executable. That is, udp2tcp first opens a TCP socket, using the LAN/WAN communications port which port is made ready to except connection requests made by tcp2udp processes located on peer hosts. Then, using the network-oriented application's port number a UDP socket is initialized. To do this, a UDP endpoint (socket) is opened and the endpoint is conditioned to receive diagram messages from any host. Then, a TCP socket is initialized with the remote host address and network-oriented application port number. A connection request is then sent over the LAN/WAN to the remote host. At this point, on the other side of the LAN/WAN the udp2tcp process accepts he connection, creates a clone process, and the clone process waits to process incoming and going messages.

Thus, after udp2tcp initialization is completed, the process enters a main loop for processing incoming and outgoing messages. This loop is exactly the same as the main loop used by tcp2udp as described herein with respect to FIG. 6. That is, a multiplexed or scheme is implemented to determine when incoming or outgoing communications are available to be processed. Application level PDUs being sent across the LAN/WAN are done with two write operations, as discussed earlier; the first write send the size of the PDU and the second write studs the actual PDU.

As mentioned, the present invention may be implemented at the operating system (OS) level. FIG. 7 depicts the functionality of the present invention added to the OS in the form of a device driver 70 which may provide functionality for both TCP/IP, X.25 and other Open Systems Interface communications/transport protocols. A kernel implementation is faster than when implemented as an application process.

While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the relevant art that various chances in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. 

1. A communication method for transmission of datagram protocol data units comprising: receiving at least one datagram protocol data unit; removing a payload portion of the at least one datagram protocol data unit; forwarding a size of the payload portion of the at least one datagram protocol data unit; separately communicating the payload portion of the at least one datagram protocol data unit; reconstructing the at least one datagram protocol data unit; and forwarding the reconstructed at least one datagram protocol data unit.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the reconstructed at least one datagram protocol data unit is forwarded to a local network oriented application.
 3. The method of claim 1, further comprising determining the size of the at least one datagram protocol data unit.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the payload portion is an application level protocol data unit.
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein the payload portion is switch provisioning information.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein forwarding the size of the payload portion is a server process.
 7. The method of claim 1, further comprising generating the at least one datagram protocol data unit.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the forwarding and communicating are performed using a TCP/IP transport protocol.
 9. A communication device that processes at least one datagram protocol data unit, comprising: an interface that receives the at least one datagram protocol data unit; a datagram service mechanism configured to remove a payload portion of the at least one datagram protocol data unit; a communications device that forwards a size of the payload portion of the at least one datagram protocol data unit and separately communicates the payload portion of the at least one datagram protocol data unit; and a counterpart datagram service mechanism configured to reconstruct the at least one datagram protocol data unit and forward the reconstructed at least one datagram protocol data unit.
 10. The communication device of claim 9, wherein the reconstructed at least one datagram protocol data unit is forwarded to a local network oriented application.
 11. The communication device of claim 9, wherein the datagram service mechanism further determines the size of the at least one datagram protocol data unit.
 12. The communication device of claim 9, wherein the payload portion is an application level protocol data unit.
 13. The communication device of claim 9, wherein the payload portion is switch provisioning information.
 14. The communication device of claim 9, wherein a server process running on the communications device forwards the size of the payload portion.
 15. The communication device of claim 9, further comprising application software adapted to generate the at least one datagram protocol data unit.
 16. The communication device of claim 9, wherein the forwarding and communicating are performed using a TCP/IP transport protocol.
 17. The communication device of claim 16, wherein the at least one protocol data unit comprises UDP protocol data units that are communicated using the TCP/IP transport protocol.
 18. The communication device of claim 16, further comprising a UDP to TCP process and a TCP to UDP process.
 19. The communication device of claim 18, wherein the UDP to TCP process and the TCP to UDP process are adapted to be a server process. 